miracule water, orgone, william reich, wilhelm reich, mesmer MORE ABOUT ORGONE ENERGY

WHAT IS ORGONE ENERGY?

by Charles R. Kelley

Franz Anton Mesmer called it animal magnetism; Charles von Reichenbach called it odyle. To Henri Bergson it was the elan vital, the "vital force;" while to Hans Driesch it was the entelechy. Sigmund Freud observed its functioning in human emotions and termed it libido. William MacDougall, the great British - American psychologist of a generation ago, labeled it hormic energy. Dozens, if not hundreds, of lesser - known scientists have recognized its presence and have given it a name to characterize its special properties. Among the 20th-century proponents of the concept are, for example, Doctors Charles Littlefield and his vital magnetism (vital force) and George Starr White and his cosmo-electric energy. Mechanistic science in the 17th through 19th centuries embraced many of its essential qualities in the concept of the ether, while mystical human beings have embraced other essential qualities of it in the concept of God.

Orgone energy is Wilhelm Reich's name for the substratum from which all nature is created. The best definition this author can provide for it is this: Orgone energy is the creative force in nature.

(Orgone energy) can be manipulated and controlled by Orgone energy devices. Perhaps the first orgone energy device was the "bacquet" (i.e., seat) of Mesmer, a crude but apparently effective form of orgone energy accumulator. Reich developed several devices for the control of orgone energy. The best known of these is the orgone energy accumulator. The accumulator is an enclosure formed by a layered arrangement of metallic and non-metallic materials which result in a concentration of energy within the enclosure.

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Wilhelm Reich -- Discoverer of ORGONE ENERGY

In 1939, just prior to the outbreak of World War II, (Wilhelm Reich) left Europe for the United States. In 1940, having scientifically proven the existence of orgone energy in the atmosphere, he built the first "orgone accumulator” -- a box-like structure designed to concentrate atmospheric orgone energy. He also conducted trials of the orgone accumulator on patients suffering from a variety of ailments. During the same year Reich wrote to Albert Einstein describing the theoretical basis of orgone energy and the orgone accumulator. He visited the professor in 1941 in Princeton, where they talked for many hours with Einstein agreeing to test the device. The outcome of Reich’s visit with the great man is recorded in the literature dealing with the history of science of Orgonomy.

In May 1956, Wilhelm Reich was arrested for violating a court injunction. Without Reich’s knowledge, and against his wishes, an associate intentionally transported orgone energy equipment across state lines. This act resulted in a charge of contempt of court. Reich refused to defend his scientific discoveries in court and was ultimately convicted only of having failed to obey the court’s injunction. He was sentenced to two years in prison. The FDA destroyed Reich’s orgone accumulators and burned, in four separate operations, books and literature. Wilhelm Reich died on November 3, 1957 in the federal penitentiary in Lewisburg, Pennsylvania.